Macs, Modularity and More

Google Screws Up Reader

Not content with the death of Buzz,
Google seems intent on killing of one of the only two products that I use.
Today, upon logging into Google Reader, I discovered that the UI has completely
fallen apart. From the welcome goodbye note:

Like many of Google’s products, Reader has gained a clean new look, with more
space and less clutter, making it even faster to navigate your feeds.

More space is the exact opposite of what’s required, both in Reader and in
Google+. Whereas in Twitter (and the old Reader) it’s possible to see many
tweets at once, now it’s possible to see even less in Google Reader.

As an example, on my Mactop I have 12 tweets showing. On Google Reader, with a window exactly the same size, I have four items showing. And each of those are two lines long, probably fitting into the size of a tweet (give or take).

Yes, it’s nice that they’re finally standardising on a single Like button (and
having all those Likes in one place makes sense, rather than spread around on
an app-by-app basis) but let’s face it, Google fired the wrong UI team. Google+
has become synonymous with spam notifications and whilst there are three or
four people I follow who regularly write many paragraphs (and let’s face it,
some of them are Googlers themselves) all that happens is I essentially ignore
any updates which aren’t on the home screen. The fact of the matter is that
Google+ is text-heavy and information-light, whereas Twitter is the exact
reverse.

But the point of a blog reader is to be able to (a) remember which ones you
have read, and which ones you haven’t; (b) display that information so you can
scan headlines quickly and determine if you want to see more. The abstract is
like the twitter message and the body is like the twitlongerer or whatever
service you use.

There will always be people who complain because it’s different, and because
it’s changed. I fully expect those three or four people who like
Buzz Google+ to like the new unified look of the two. But
Reader has just gone several steps backwards in usability thanks to a user
interface which appears to be modelled on the East Coast’s current snowstorm
whiteout, with just a few bits visible here and there.

Can anyone recommend a good Mac (or Windows) client for reading Google Reader
and synchronising the read state across multiple devices? Or even a completely
new reader UI from a different company? I’m not staying around for this UI
disaster.